Petroleum electricity generation surpassed natural gas in New England during winter storm

January 29, 2026 at 2:00 PM
EIA – Today in Energy Energy_Data_Analysis Forecasting & grid analytics climate_energy_news ✓ Processed US_GLOBAL

AI Analysis

Relevance Score: 0.80/1.0

Summary

Although petroleum accounts for less than 1% of total U.S. utility-scale electric power generation, regions such as New England rely on oil-fired units during winter periods when cold weather creates high demand. When Winter Storm Fern affected New England this week, petroleum was the predominant energy source starting around midday on January 24 and lasting until early morning on January 26. Since then, petroleum and natural gas have been fluctuating as the primary energy source.

Although petroleum accounts for less than 1% of total U.S. utility-scale electric power generation, regions such as New England rely on oil-fired units during winter periods when cold weather creates high demand. When Winter Storm Fern affected New England this week, petroleum was the predominant energy source starting around midday on January 24 and lasting until early morning on January 26. Since then, petroleum and natural gas have been fluctuating as the primary energy source.

📝 RSS Summary Only
Collected 3 weeks, 4 days ago
View Original Article